Julio Jeldres Cambodia Collection

Title

Julio Jeldres Cambodia Collection

Identifier

http://hdl.handle.net/1959.1/1402238

Description

The Julio Jeldres Cambodia Collection, held at the Sir Louis Matheson Library, comprises a series of folders and boxes of correspondence, declassified diplomatic reports and research papers between Ambassador Julio Jeldres and His Late Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia between 1970 and 2012.

A collection of letters exchanged between Ambassador Julio Jeldres and the late King Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia, the Australian Prime Minister, Ministers, and Members of Parliament in the years between 1970 and 1981. In this series of correspondence Jeldres urged the de-recognition of the Pol Pot regime which Australia had recognised in 1975, long before Pol Pot was known as the powerful Secretary General of the Cambodian Communist Party, popularly known as the "Khmer Rouge" and when the regime was known as the Royal government of National Union of Cambodia (GRUNC) led by the late King Norodom Sihanouk. In early 1976, King Sihanouk resigned as Head of State of GRUNC and Khmer Rouge leader Khieu Samphan, took over as President of the State Presidium of what became known as "Democratic Kampuchea", with Pol Pot as Prime Minister as well as Secretary General of the CCP.

After the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in January 1979, the remnants of the Pol Pot regime relocated to the jungle areas bordering Thailand and began a guerrilla war against the Vietnamese. Originally supported by China, it soon received the support of ASEAN and some Western countries which opposed Vietnam's Communist regime and they in turn put pressure in countries such as Australia not to withdraw recognition from "Democratic Kampuchea" and to support its seat at the United Nations General Assembly. The late King opposed recognition of the Pol Pot regime and also called for the Cambodian seat at the United Nations to be left vacant until such a time when the Cambodian people had the opportunity to participate in a free and fair election.

In Australia, there was strong public opinion against the Pol Pot regime but the government of Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser felt that if it withdrew recognition from "Democratic Kampuchea" it would jeopardise its relations with China and ASEAN. The Australian government was divided about the issue with the Foreign Minister, Andrew Peacock, pushing for an early de-recognition of the regime and the Prime Minister opposing it.

In China, were he lived in exile, the late King found himself opposing the views of the Chinese government and at times his relationship with Chinese leaders was indeed on edge. On a number of opportunities, he was not allowed to send telegrams as it was his practice. Thus, he responded to telegrams and letters by sending Chinese postcards in which he still criticised the Pol Pot regime and those that supported it.

On 14 February 1981, Australia finally withdrew recognition from "Democratic Kampuchea", while continuing to support the ASEAN-sponsored resolutions at the United Nations General Assembly to occupy the Cambodian seat at the UN and related agencies.